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Sunday, June 19, 2016

Music : Dreams of a Chinese Opera

Hi!

In the retrospective post about the High End show 2016 I mentioned the discovery of some interesting music and as promised I am presenting that record today.




The record is called Dreams of a Chinese Opera II. It is contemporary classical Chinese music. A genre which is probably quite unheard of in the western world.

The record is published by Rhymoi, a Chinese label which is specialised in this type of music. The records are actually made in Germany. The music is also available on CD. During the High End fair Mr Ye, the producer of this record visited our room and asked if we would like to play a record. We are always happy to play visitors records. This is a great opportunity to discover some new music. And this one was a very pleasant surprise. We did not know what to expect. The whole room was very quiet when the first beautiful sounds came off the vinyl. What beautiful music. It is actually a mix of classical western orchestra with traditional Chinese instruments. The audience was quite awed by the music as I was myself and Mr. Ye received applause for providing us with this treat.




In addition to the beauty of the music it is also very well recorded and the vinyl is of superb quality with low surface noise. The tone is very rich in harmonics and colourful.  A pleasure to listen to.




Such kind of music deserves more exposure outside of China and I am trying to arrange the import of some of these records for distribution in Europe.




Here a video clip with the first track of the record for you to enjoy:




Many thanks to Mr. Ye for letting me have this album which I enjoyed a lot since we met in Munich.

Best regards

Thomas



Sunday, June 12, 2016

Stereo 300B Tower Amp Glowing

Hi!

Here some more photos of the Stereo 300B amp in Tower style chassis which I showed last month. This time with the tubes lit up.




 Amp and power supply glowing in the dark:




Amp chassis:



 Power Supply:




 Some angles taken from the amp section:










PSU:



Some photos of the amp outside at night:






Makes a nice light show in the dark!

Best regards

Thomas


Monday, June 6, 2016

D3a Differential Phono Preamplifier, Part 1

Hi!

After the great results I got from the EC8020 differential phono stage, two more versions of that circuit will be built.




One will be a scaled up version with all silver transformers, but before that I am building it with the more affordable and less scarce D3a tubes.




It will share the same circuit concept but with transformers and chokes adapted for the operating conditions of the D3a which will be triode wired.




The same chassis layout is used and the same vibration damped mounting of each tube socket.




8 D3a tubes arranged in two rows.




Transformer coupled and fully balanced throughout and of course with 600 Ohm LCR RIAA EQ.




Stay tuned for updates on this new phono!

Best regards

Thomas

Wednesday, June 1, 2016

The Ultimate Line Preamplifier, Part 4

Hi!

Since I recently finished another one of my ultimate line preamplifiers, I though I share some thoughts again about it's sound.




Yes, it's quite unusual for me to write about sound, and to rave about my own creations, but this preamp is really special and keeps surprising me.




It shares the same circuit and component quality with the first ultimate line preamp I built. Only the inputs are set for different gains. While the first one had the input transformers wired for 0dB, +6dB and +12dB. This one has -6dB, 0 and +6dB to accommodate loud sources in the system it will be used in.

Silver transformers and chokes from the recent batch of silver goodies have been used. In total 14 pieces of silver wound goods!

And of course equipped with the 1602 variant of the 10Y triode.




There is a lot of scepticism around against silver transformers. Do they really make such a difference?  I am not a wire and cable nut and use the most modest interconnect and speaker cables you can think of. But silver simply works for me in transformers. I do use solid core silver wire for all the internal signal path of amps and preamps but that is more to calm the nervosa audiophila which could otherwise raise it's ugly head ;-) But in actual tests I do not hear big differences between different wires. Yes there are differences but they are not important to me as described in the post about my thoughts about wire. But silver transformers are an entirely different story.

Especially in this case where in addition the signal path is truly free of capacitors. Silver input transformers to tubes to silver output transformers to silver AVCs. Can't get much purer than that.




I already described my impressions in part 3 about this line stage. What I realised this time is the ability of this preamp to lift up an entire system even if the other components are of modest quality. Initial listening tests were done with a 7 year old build of my 6CB5A amplifier concept. The best implementation with Tango transformers but all copper and no DHTs. I used a ridiculously modest source. A vintage (more than 30 years old) Philips CD100 player, completely stock, no mods. All hooked up with cheap interconnects (single digit price range).

The improvements due to this line stage were easily audible from the next room! I was soldering on my workbench while the system was playing in the listening room with the door open. Subtle and sweet sounds swapped over from there and kept distracting me from soldering. This is when a change in a system really matters. When you hear it from the next room.




Then hooked up to my main system with the single ended EC8020 phono and the recently built stereo 300B amp or the 801A/211 monos, the strengths of this line stage became even more apparent.
Extremely life like voices and instruments. Cymbals are so nicely resolved and just swinging right there in the air. No trace of harshness even when the record is a bit roughly done. Still in this system the line stage was the only all silver component. Sadly I have to ship it to it's owner now. I need to build one for myself and I will pair it with a matching all silver variant of the differential EC8020 phono stage.





Stay tuned!

Best regards

Thomas

Thursday, May 26, 2016

Tube of the Month : The 6SL7

Hi!

This month I am presenting a high mu dual triode. The 6SL7.




The 6SL7 could be regarded as the high mu companion to the medium mu 6SN7. Like the 6SN7 it became quite popular during the 1990ies among audio amplifier builders. It went through a similar popularity cycle as the 6SN7. After being overused and often in applications for which it is not well suited, it went a bit of fashion.


It shares the same octal base and pinout with the 6SN7. To some tube rollers this made it seem compatible and it was often tried as an alternative to get more gain. While the 6SL7 might work in some circuits designed for the 6SN7 and provide a bit higher gain, it really is a different animal and should only be used in circuits which are designed for it. The heater operates at the same 6.3V as the 6SN7 but at only half the current (300mA). As mentioned above it is a high mu triode with an amplification factor of 70 vs the 20 of the 6SN7. But that high amplification factor comes at a cost. The 6SL7 has a plate resistance of 44kOhms which is more than 6 times higher than the rp of the 6SN7. It also operates at a lower current, typically around 2ma. For complete technical data please see the data sheet.
This high plate resistance which comes with a rather low transconductance probably is the reason why it lost popularity a bit when higher transconductance tubes became more fashionable. But this does not make it a bad tube. If the circuit is designed for it's parameters it is a great performer and it works well in unison with the 6SN7. For example as first stage in a phono preamplifier. Correctly implemented the 6SL7 gives a nice warm and smooth sound. As it does for example in my Octal Preamplifier Mk1. The 6SL7 has also been used as driver tube for small triodes like the 45 or 71A. With both sections wired in parallel to halve the plate resistance this can work well and offer the possibility to build a simple two stage amplifier. I wouldn't use it for larger triodes though. I prefer it in small signal applications like phono stages. The reason for it's deserved popularity in the 1990ies was it's good linearity:



A cross check with measurements of a tube sample confirms the very good linearity shown in the data sheet:




Due to it's popularity prices soared at some point especially for certain hyped versions. But it can still be found at reasonable prices if you look around a bit. The tube has been made by all the major manufacturers and NOS specimens are still around in large numbers.




Above two 6SL7 tubes made by Tung-Sol (the old Tung-Sol, not the currently made in Russia tubes, which only carry the Tung-Sol brand name).




These have a nice low loss micanol base.




Another version which only has a different color printing on the base.




Tung-Sol made these in different variations:




A close up of the one with black base:




Compared to the micanol base version:




Some close ups:







Another one with black base but shorter glass:




General Electric 6SL7:






Some close ups:





PhilipsECG 6SL7WGT made for the military:









RCA also made various 6SL7 tubes:




This is a military version with the VT-229 designation











A consumer variant of the RCA 6SL7:







Close Ups:





A later RCA version with the so called 'coin base':






Coin base tubes are often frowned upon by audiophiles.






But that is unjustified. They can perform just as well as the full base versions if the tube is healthy and measures well.




Like the 6SN7, the 6SL7 has an improved industrial 4 digit version, the 5691:




This is probably the most sought after variant.




Simply stunning looking with the ox blood coloured base.




A lot of extra bracing was added to improve shock resistance.




This was done to make the tube usable in aircraft and space applications.




Wether this is of any advantage in audio is of course questionable.





The 5691 certainly looks good though.






And lastly some 6SL7GT made by Sylvania








Some close ups:






A Sylvania 6SL7WGT:




Brown micanol base:






Close up to the plate structure:




Shots from different angles:






That's all about the 6SL7. I hope you enjoyed it.

Best regards

Thomas